PGA Championship 2026: Here's the record prize money payout for each golfer at Aronimink

· Yahoo Sports

The rapid rise in prize money payouts in golf have been a provocative topic in all circles of the sport. The launch of LIV Golf and its megamillion-dollar purses forced the PGA Tour to offer more as well, creating exponential leaps that in the short run made sense to stave off a looking competitor but in the long run created questions of fiscal sustainability. Meanwhile, caught in the backdraft were the major championships, previously sporting among the largest paydays in the game only to fall behind and have to make tough decisions on whether they’d increase their purses at a similar rate. New R&A chief Mark Darbon lamented the problem, noting the zero-sum effect that increase in prize money have on funding the governing bodies other initiatives.

Not surprisingly, then, when new PGA of America CEO Terry Clark met with the media for the first time on Wednesday ahead of the PGA Championship, he, too, was asked about purses and how much longer they could continue going up. The topic came with a subtle change in context given LIV Golf’s uncertain future now that the PIF won’t be funding them past this year and whether prize money payout had finally plateaued.

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The specific question for Clark was what was his approach in general to making sure the PGA Championship continues competitive with its purse but staying financially responsible? Here’s his response:

“Yeah, it's a balanced approach. … We're really focused on all aspects of how do we improve and continue to look at improvement at the assets we have, including PGA Championships. This is a really important one. Obviously, it's something we look at every year.”

Despite the cautious tone, the PGA of America announced on Saturday morning that this year's prize money payout would be a record $20 million, a $1 million increase from a year ago, with the winner earning $3.69 million. However, this still puts the PGA Championship third highest among the majors behind the U.S. Open ($21.5 million) and the Masters ($21.5 million last month 2026). The Open Championship paid out $17 million at Royal Portrush last July.

Clark, on the job since January, said the decision on prize money isn’t necessarily tied to what the other majors payout or what the PGA Tour does with its $20 million signature events and $25 million Players Championship payday.

“It's not always in comparison to all of those,” Clark said. “It's what are the factor that's make sense. We do look at it as an annual focus around how do we get at competitive purses.”

For the curious, here’s a quick look at the history of the prize money payout at the PGA Championship:

Year: Winner's Pay, Total Purse 1916: $500, $2,580 (first year of the event) 1931: $1,000, $7,200 (first year winner's pay increased) 1953: $5,000, $20,700 (first year winner's pay was $5K) 1958: $5,500, $39,388 (first year of stroke play, also the winner's amount actually decreased that year) 1965: $25,000, $149,700 1978: $50,000, $300,240 1983: $100,000, $608,099 1988: $160,000, $1,000,000 (first year with a $1M total purse) 1993: $300,000, $1,702,750 1998: $540,000, $2,886,800 2000: $900,000, $5,031,100 (first year with a $5M total purse) 2003: $1,080,000, $5,938,300 (first year with $1M-plus to the winner) 2009: $1,350,000, $7,484,500 2014: $1,800,000, $9,913,000 2018: $1,980,000, $11 million 2021: $2,160,000, $12 million 2022: $2,700,000, $15 million 2023: $3,150,000, $17 million 2024: $3,300,000, $18 million 2025: $3,420,000, $19 million

Here's the prize money payout for each golfer this year. Come back after play ends on Sunday and we'll update the list with names and individual paydays:

Win: $3,690,000

2: $2,214,000

3: $1,394,000

4: $984,000

5: $820,000

6: $727,600

7: $681,050

8: $636,400

9: $593,700

10: $553,000

11: $514,160

12: $477,300

13: $442,370

14: $409,390

15: $378,340

16: $349,240

17: $322,080

18: $296,850

19: $273,570

20: $252,230

21: $232,830

22: $215,370

23: $199,840

24: $187,230

25: $175,110

26: $163,460

27: $152,310

28: $141,640

29: $131,450

30: $121,750

31: $113,990

32: $107,200

33: $101,380

34: $96,530

35: $92,650

36: $88,960

37: $85,370

38: $81,880

39: $78,480

40: $75,180

41: $71,980

42: $68,880

43: $65,870

44: $62,960

45: $60,150

46: $57,430

47: $54,810

48: $52,290

49: $49,860

50: $47,540

51: $45,300

52: $43,170

53: $41,130

54: $39,190

55: $37,350

56: $35,600

57: $33,950

58: $32,600

59: $31,430

60: $30,460

61: $29,690

62: $29,120

63: $28,640

64: $28,180

65: $27,740

66: $27,310

67: $26,890

68: $26,480

69: $26,080

70: $25,690

71: $25,360

72: $25,040

73: $24,730

74: $24,530

75: $24,230

76: $24,230

77: $24,130

78: $24,040

79: $23,970

80: $23,930

81: $23,910

82: $23,900

Players missing the cut and turning in a 36-hole score will be paid $4,300 each. Any player making the cut, but failing to submit a 72-hole score, will also be paid $4,300.

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